Latest News
CBN increases capital requirements of banks, gives 24 months for compliance
News Highlight
Banks with international authorisation to raise their capital to N500 billion.
Days after urging Nigerian banks to expedite action on the recapitalisation of their capital base in order to strengthen the financial system, the Central Bank of Nigeria (CBN) on Thursday, 28 March 2024, unveiled new minimum capital requirements for banks, pegging the minimum capital base for commercial banks with international authorisation at N500 billion.
Commercial banks with national authorisation is now required to has N200 billion, while the new requirement for those with regional authorization is N50 billion.
The new minimum capital for merchant banks is N50 billion, while the new requirements for non-interest banks with national and regional authorisations are N20 billion and N10 billion, respectively.
A circular signed by the Director, Financial Policy and Regulation Department, Haruna Mustafa, to all commercial, merchant, and non-interest banks and promoters of proposed banks emphasised that all banks are required to meet the minimum capital requirement within 24 months commencing from April 1, 2024, and terminating on March 31, 2026
According to the circular, the move, initially disclosed by the CBN Governor, Olayemi Cardoso, in his address to the Annual Bankers’ Dinner in November 2023, was to enhance banks' resilience, solvency, and capacity to continue supporting the growth of the Nigerian economy.
To enable them to meet the minimum capital requirements, the CBN urged banks to consider injection of fresh equity capital through private placements, rights issues, and/or offers for subscription; mergers and acquisitions (M&As); and/or upgrade or downgrade of license authorisation.
Furthermore, the circular disclosed that the minimum capital shall comprise paid-up capital and share premium only. It stressed that the new capital requirement shall not be based on the shareholders’ fund.
“Additional Tier 1 (AT1) Capital shall not be eligible for meeting the new requirement. Notwithstanding the capital increase, banks are to ensure strict compliance with the minimum capital adequacy ratio (CAR) requirement applicable to their license authorisation,” according to the circular, adding that “In line with extant regulations, banks that breach the CAR requirement shall be required to inject fresh capital to regularise their position.”
The CBN circular said the minimum capital requirement for proposed banks shall be paid-up capital, adding that the new minimum capital requirement shall apply to all new applications for banking licenses submitted after April 1, 2024. It noted that the CBN would continue to process all pending applications for banking licenses for which a capital deposit had been made and/or an Approval-in-Principle (AIP) had been granted.
However, the circular stated that the promoters of such proposed banks would make up the difference between the capital deposited with the CBN and the new capital requirement no later than March 31, 2026.
Meanwhile, the CBN said all banks are required to submit an implementation plan (clearly indicating the chosen option(s) for meeting the new capital requirement and various activities involved with their timelines) no later than 30 April 2024.
The CBN also disclosed that it will monitor and ensure compliance with the new requirements within the specified timeline.
Related News
Latest Blogs
- Access Holdings and African art renaissance
- NMDPRA should balance local content with market competition
- Why ‘T-Pain’ should be Tinubu's least worry
- Access Bank Project 111 providing a lifeline for women battling fibroids
- How Nigeria can boost maritime financing
Most Popular News
- Kenya’s KCB Bank signs €230mn deal to support SMEs, youth and women
- AfDB has invested $1.44bn to support infrastructure development in Nigeria
- FG proposes N47.9 trillion for 2025 budget
- Unpaid care work prevents 708m women from participating in labour market
- Airtel Africa records broad growth in half year results
- UK budget to drive wealth and talent exodus from Britain - investor